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Strategic Decisions (Part II)

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Title: Strategic Decisions (Part II)


1
Strategic Decisions (Part II)
2
Decision Phases of a Supply Chain
  • Supply chain strategy or design
  • Automate flow of information between company and
    supply chain partners
  • Supply chain planning
  • Generate demand forecasts for a product (demand
    planning) and help develop sourcing and
    manufacturing plans for that product
  • Supply chain operation
  • Manage the flow of products through distribution
    centers and warehouses to ensure that products
    are delivered to the right locations in the most
    efficient manner

3
Supply Chain Planning
  • Definition of a set of policies that govern
    short-term operations
  • Fixed by the supply configuration from previous
    phase
  • Starts with a forecast of demand in the coming
    year

4
Supply Chain Planning
  • Planning decisions
  • Which markets will be supplied from which
    locations
  • Planned buildup of inventories
  • Subcontracting, backup locations
  • Inventory policies
  • Timing and size of market promotions
  • Must consider in planning decisions demand
    uncertainty, exchange rates, competition over the
    time horizon

5
Capacity Management in a Supply Chain
  • Managing capacity
  • Time flexibility from workforce
  • Use of seasonal workforce
  • Use of subcontracting
  • Use of dual facilities dedicated and flexible
  • Designing product flexibility into production
    processes

6
The Capacity Management Problem
  • Given the demand forecast for each period in the
    planning horizon, determine the production level,
    inventory level, and the capacity level for each
    period that maximizes the firms (supply chains)
    profit over the planning horizon
  • Specify the planning horizon (typically 3-18
    months)
  • Specify the duration of each period
  • Specify key information required to develop
    capacity management plan

7
Capacity Management Strategies
  • Trade-off between capacity, inventory,
    backlog/lost sales
  • Chase strategy using capacity as the lever
  • Time flexibility from workforce or capacity
    strategy using utilization as the lever
  • Level strategy using inventory as the lever
  • Mixed strategy a combination of one or more of
    the first three strategies

8
Chase Strategy
  • Production rate is synchronized with demand by
    varying machine capacity or hiring and laying off
    workers as the demand rate varies
  • However, in practice, it is often difficult to
    vary capacity and workforce on short notice
  • Expensive if cost of varying capacity is high
  • Negative effect on workforce morale
  • Results in low levels of inventory
  • Should be used when inventory holding costs are
    high and costs of changing capacity are low

9
Time Flexibility Strategy
  • Can be used if there is excess machine capacity
  • Workforce is kept stable, but the number of hours
    worked is varied over time to synchronize
    production and demand
  • Can use overtime or a flexible work schedule
  • Requires flexible workforce, but avoids morale
    problems of the chase strategy
  • Low levels of inventory, lower utilization
  • Should be used when inventory holding costs are
    high and capacity is relatively inexpensive

10
Level Strategy
  • Maintain stable machine capacity and workforce
    levels with a constant output rate
  • Shortages and surpluses result in fluctuations in
    inventory levels over time
  • Inventories that are built up in anticipation of
    future demand or backlogs are carried over from
    high to low demand periods
  • Better for worker morale
  • Large inventories and backlogs may accumulate
  • Should be used when inventory holding and backlog
    costs are relatively low

11
Decision Phases of a Supply Chain
  • Supply chain strategy or design
  • Automate flow of information between company and
    supply chain partners
  • Supply chain planning
  • Generate demand forecasts for a product (demand
    planning) and help develop sourcing and
    manufacturing plans for that product
  • Supply chain operation
  • Manage the flow of products through distribution
    centers and warehouses to ensure that products
    are delivered to the right locations in the most
    efficient manner

12
Supply Chain Operation
  • Time horizon is weekly or daily
  • Decisions regarding individual customer orders
  • Supply chain configuration is fixed and operating
    policies are determined
  • Goal is to implement the operating policies as
    effectively as possible
  • Allocate orders to inventory or production, set
    order due dates, generate pick lists at a
    warehouse, allocate an order to a particular
    shipment, set delivery schedules, place
    replenishment orders
  • Much less uncertainty (short time horizon)

13
Drivers of Supply Chain Performance
  • Facilities
  • places where inventory is stored, assembled, or
    fabricated
  • production sites and storage sites
  • Inventory
  • raw materials, WIP, finished goods within a
    supply chain
  • inventory policies
  • Transportation
  • combinations of transportation modes and routes

14
Drivers of Supply Chain Performance
  • Information
  • data and analysis regarding inventory,
    transportation, facilities throughout the supply
    chain
  • potentially the biggest driver of supply chain
    performance
  • Sourcing
  • functions a firm performs and functions that are
    outsourced
  • Pricing
  • Price associated with goods and services provided
    by a firm to the supply chain

15
Supply Chain Performance Measurement
Metrics for measuring supply chain performance
  1. Fill rate (the ability to fill orders by the due
    date)
  2. Average time from order to delivery
  3. The number of days of supply in inventory
  4. Forecast accuracy
  5. The cycle time for sourcing and making a product

16
Case Study Toyotas Demand Planning
  • With more than 1,200 accessory part numbers
    Toyota was experiencing greater business
    complexity and increased business volume
    regarding new models and parts
  • The spreadsheet-based system Toyota used to
    manage its supply chain processes was less than
    optimal. Toyotas accessory supply administrators
    had to go into the spreadsheets to manually enter
    and extract critical vehicle information.

17
Toyotas Challenges
  • To automate the forecasting process
  • To allow more time to examine demand drivers
  • To remove inefficiencies from the supply chain

18
Toyotas Supply Chain Solution
  • Replace existing spreadsheet-based system
  • Enable administrators to investigate issues
    during ordering process
  • Analyze part numbers more effectively

19
How did i2 Technology help?
  • Toyota chose i2 Demand Planner as the solution
    to forecast future demand for its automotive
    parts and accessories.
  • Demand Planner provides an environment that
    combines the best statistical techniques,
    unlimited causal factors, and the ability to
    manage multiple inputs with best-in-class,
    multi-dimensional data representation and
    analysis in a user-friendly manner.

20
The Outcome
  • increased forecasters efficiency
  • Improved communication among supply chain
    divisions
  • Reduced inventory shortages and overages
    resulting from poor forecasting

21
Discuss the following questions
  • What problems do Toyota address? How does i2
    Technology supply chain solution help solve these
    problems?
  • What issues and challenges do Toyota present?
    What can be done to address these issues?
  • What are the business as well as the technology
    issues that should be addressed when i2
    Technology provide Toyota demand planning
    solution?
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